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Irish provincial cultures in the long eighteenth-century

Irish provincial cultures in the long eighteenth-century

Raymond Gillespie, T. C. Barnard, Foster, R. F.

About this book

"In this book, thirteen distinguished historians of early modern Ireland recreate the lost world of those who carved out a middle position between the aristocracy and the tenantry of provincial Ireland. These essays chart the sometimes easy relationships between local and wider worlds, consider the societies that those in provincial Ireland made for themselves and document the material goods with which they adorned the places they occupied. By considering aspects of the long eighteenth century as diverse as music, wine consumption, buildings, paintings, plasterwork and print as well as the better-known subjects of the law, landlord improvement and literary patronage, this volume builds a fascinating picture of a restless society trying to adapt itself to the needs of a complex and divided world. These essays provide new insights and perspectives on a world that is usually seen through the windows of the parliament house or the episcopal palace. In doing so they reveal much about the texture of a world that is gradually coming to be understood as the fascinating and complex society that it was, in which the middling sort sought their own salvation in a vortex of political, economic and religious change."--Publisher's website.

Details

OL Work ID
OL22748622W

Subjects

Country lifeHistoryCivilizationMiddle classCountry life, irelandIreland, history

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.